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The Galactic Faraday rotation sky 2020

Authors :
Hutschenreuter, Sebastian
Anderson, Craig S.
Betti, Sarah
Bower, Geoffrey C.
Brown, Jo-Anne
Brüggen, Marcus
Carretti, Ettore
Clarke, Tracy
Clegg, Andrew
Costa, Allison
Croft, Steve
Van Eck, Cameron
Gaensler, B. M.
de Gasperin, Francesco
Haverkorn, Marijke
Heald, George
Hull, Charles L. H.
Inoue, Makoto
Johnston-Hollitt, Melanie
Kaczmarek, Jane
Law, Casey
Ma, Yik Ki
MacMahon, David
Mao, Sui Ann
Riseley, Christopher
Roy, Subhashis
Shanahan, Russell
Shimwell, Timothy
Stil, Jeroen
Sobey, Charlotte
O'Sullivan, Shane
Tasse, Cyril
Vacca, Valentina
Vernstrom, Tessa
Williams, Peter K. G.
Wright, Melvyn
Enßlin, Torsten A.
Source :
A&A 657, A43 (2022)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

This work gives an update to existing reconstructions of the Galactic Faraday rotation sky by processing almost all Faraday rotation data sets available at the end of the year 2020. Observations of extra-Galactic sources in recent years have, among other regions, further illuminated the previously under-constrained southern celestial sky, as well as parts of the inner disc of the Milky Way. This has culminated in an all-sky data set of 55,190 data points, which is a significant expansion on the 41,330 used in previous works, hence making an updated separation of the Galactic component a promising venture. The increased source density allows us to present our results in a resolution of about $1.3\cdot 10^{-2}\, \mathrm{deg}^2$ ($46.8\,\mathrm{arcmin}^2$), which is a twofold increase compared to previous works. As for previous Faraday rotation sky reconstructions, this work is based on information field theory, a Bayesian inference scheme for field-like quantities which handles noisy and incomplete data. In contrast to previous reconstructions, we find a significantly thinner and pronounced Galactic disc with small-scale structures exceeding values of several thousand $\mathrm{rad}\,\mathrm{m}^{-2}$. The improvements can mainly be attributed to the new catalog of Faraday data, but are also supported by advances in correlation structure modeling within numerical information field theory. We furthermore give a detailed discussion on statistical properties of the Faraday rotation sky and investigate correlations to other data sets.<br />Comment: accepted in A&A; 15 pages, 12 Figures; results at https://wwwmpa.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~ensslin/research/data/faraday2020.html and http://cutouts.cirada.ca/rmcutout

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 657, A43 (2022)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2102.01709
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202140486